Between looming deadlines, constantly shifting tax laws, and somehow even heavier workloads than last year, client experience often ends up at the bottom of the priority list for most accounting firms.
And with many firms actually turning work away, it’s easy to think: Why bother improving our client experience? We’re at capacity anyway.
But here’s the reality: your client experience directly impacts your team’s productivity, sanity, and your bottom line.
If you don’t intentionally design how clients interact with your firm, they’ll do it for you and the way they want to do things often leads to miscommunications, inefficiencies, and chaos.
That’s why auditing your client experience isn’t a luxury. It’s a necessity.
I hear a lot of accountants refer to client experience as something that’s just “nice to have.” Wrong. Client experience is a strategic lever that a lot of firms aren’t bothering to pull. Here’s why:
Clients trust you with their finances, which means any lapse, like an unclear email or a missed follow-up, can trigger anxiety. That stress often gets redirected back to you and your team.
A well-structured experience reduces those panicked, late-night emails and rushed document uploads. Your workflows become smoother, your time more predictable.
A clear client journey allows you to set expectations early and maintain consistent communication protocols, especially valuable during busy seasons.
Streamlined experiences allow you to serve more of your ideal clients while confidently turning away those who don’t fit.
The good news? You don’t need a fancy consulting project to improve client experience. All it takes is a bit of time and a willingness to see things from your client’s point of view.
Begin by stepping into the shoes of a first-time client and walking through the process from their perspective. Ask yourself:
Pay close attention to points of confusion, slowdowns, or ambiguity. Write down every friction point you hit. Anywhere you feel confused or unsure, your clients definitely do too. These are the areas ripe for improvement.
Next, examine how your firm communicates:
A disjointed system makes it harder for both clients and staff to stay on track.
Technology can either simplify or complicate. Make sure yours is simplifying.
If your firm uses a client portal, make sure it’s fully integrated into your workflows. Don’t treat it as a nice-to-have add-on. The portal should be the single destination for:
When used consistently, a good portal acts like a digital front desk. It shows clients exactly how to work with you, and it reinforces boundaries without having to repeat yourself.
Once your client journey is smoothed out, train your team to enforce the process. During onboarding, make it crystal clear how clients should communicate, submit documents, and reach out for help.
Be prepared to gently steer clients back on course if they stray. You’re not being inflexible; you’re protecting your team’s time and ensuring a better experience for everyone.
And yes, some clients may resist. That’s okay. Not every client is a fit, and establishing clear boundaries can help you identify those misalignments earlier, not later.
If your journey is clear, your team should be trained to stick to it. That means:
Some clients will resist structure. That’s okay. Boundaries are how you protect your team’s time and identify which clients truly fit your firm.
Improving your client experience isn’t just about making things easier for clients.
When you reduce confusion, set clear boundaries, and create a predictable system, everyone benefits:
Taking even one hour to walk through and audit your client journey can reveal small changes with big returns. And the sooner you start, the faster your firm can run smoother, more profitably, and with a lot less chaos.
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